TITLE:
Optimal Parameters for in Vitro Development of the Fungus Hydrocarbonoclastic Penicillium sp
AUTHORS:
Marcia Eugenia Ojeda-Morales, Miguel Ángel Hernández-Rivera, José Gabriel Martínez-Vázquez, Yolanda Córdova-Bautista, Yuridia Evelin Hernández-Cardeño
KEYWORDS:
Hydrocarbon Degraders; Optimal Growth; Penicillium sp.; Hydrocarbonoclastic
JOURNAL NAME:
Advances in Chemical Engineering and Science,
Vol.3 No.4A,
September
25,
2013
ABSTRACT:
México has extensive areas that have been
impacted by oil spills for several decades. Current bioremediation technologies
mostly used microorganisms to decontaminate sites with hydrocarbons. This
research evaluated the conditions for the optimal development of the strain of
a hydrocarbonoclastic fungus, which was found in samples of soil contaminated
with 4.0 × 105 mg·kg-1 of Total Petroleum Hydrocarbons (TPH). A completely
randomized experimental design with a 3 × 3 × 4 factor arrangement was used:
three levels of temperature (T1 = 29℃, T2 = 35℃ and T3 = 40℃), three of pH (pH1 = 3.5, pH2 = 5.0 and pH3 = 6.0) and four nutrients (N1 = Urea, N2 = Triple-17, N3 = Nitrophoska-Blue and N4 = Pure-Salts). Total fungi were isolated
from the sampled soil and were sown in a combined carbon medium for hydrocarbonoclastic
fungi and a strain was selected to be adapted to a liquid mineral medium. The
selected strain was classified as Penicillium sp. Analyses of variance and mean tests were performed, using the SPSS-11.0
statistical software. The microorganisms showed the highest population growth
in the treatment N2pH2T1, which reached a
value of 2.1 × 106 CFU·mL-1 in a biorreactor. To reach it,
by bioaugmentation, the same development of Penicillium sp. in a conditioned soil would allow to implement a bioremediation strategy
with great potential to retrieve soil contaminated with hydrocarbons both in
Tabasco and in general in Mexico.